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Star investigation
Slacking
off gets high marks at this ‘high school’
We were a classroom
full of underachievers.The bright but aloof teenager
who failed chemistry because he skipped nearly an entire semester. The bespectacled girl who consistently came to class an hour late
and rarely wrote anything down because she took notes “with my mind.” And
then there was me, a Toronto Star reporter posing as a summer school
student upgrading her Grade 12 chemistry mark so she could apply for nursing
college. I was a mediocre pupil at best: I barely studied, never handed in
homework and failed most of my tests.But after
completing a four-week, watered-down chemistry course at a private high school
called Toronto Collegiate Institute, or TCI, the three of us walked away with
marks we wanted — but did not deserve. For the month of July, I spent four
hours a day in a Scarborough classroom as part of a Star investigation
into alleged high school “credit mills,” a growing problem in Ontario where
private schools are essentially handing out credits and grades for a fee. • How Star
reporter went undercover as a student What I observed was
troubling: a credit course scheduled for 84 hours of classroom time instead of
the 110 minimum required by the Ministry of Education; a teacher assisting
students on tests or revealing questions beforehand; a struggling student
permitted to rewrite tests she failed, open book; a student granted his credit
after registering late and attending only the last week of the class. Since 2009, the
Ministry of Education has received dozens of complaints about private schools
inflating marks — at least three were about TCI. One complaint filed by a
guidance counsellor last year involved an R.H. King
Academy student who had math marks ranging from 28 per cent to 57 per cent.
That student went to TCI for Grade 12 calculus and scored 84 per cent. The ministry is
responsible for inspecting private schools but oversight is lax. According to
documents obtained through freedom of information requests, TCI was inspected
at least four times between 2005 and 2009 and consistently failed to assess and
evaluate students in accordance with provincial standards. Nevertheless, the
Scarborough school was allowed to continue operating and granting credits.
Between 2005 and 2009, at least 651 students have obtained high school credits
from TCI. In an interview with
the Star, the school director, Sivam Mahalingam, said he is committed to improving the quality
of education being offered at TCI, which is still a relatively new school. He admitted to
breaching provincial rules by offering a chemistry course 26 hours short of the
ministry requirement. Mahalingam said he decided to
shorten the course because summer students “can’t stay that long” and the
teacher taught two subjects back-to-back and was “tired.” But on the question of
mark inflation, Mahalingam flatly denied that his
school was giving students an easy ride. “We don’t just pass
the student, no,” he said. “It’s not (like) we are for easy marks, no, we don’t
do that.” But in my class this
summer, the boy who failed chemistry at his regular high school emerged from
TCI with a glowing mark of 88 per cent. The bespectacled girl — who had a 20
per cent average going into her final exam at TCI — received a final grade of
75 per cent, a mark that was mathematically impossible. My final mark also
defied mathematical logic. Going into my final exam, I had a middling 60 per
cent average. I was told my final exam would be worth 30 per cent of my overall
grade — that means the highest mark I could hope for was 72, but I would have
to get a perfect score on my final exam. I did not score
perfect on my final exam. Yet, I wound up receiving a final chemistry mark of
72 per cent anyway — and then, the teacher arbitrarily boosted that by another
13 percentage points. My final grade: 85 per
cent. It didn’t take much
for me to be accepted as a student at TCI. All I had to do was hand over a
doctored high school transcript, $500 in cash (plus a $50 registration fee) and
another $35 for a photocopied, ring-bound textbook. Although the ministry
requires private schools to verify students’ identities, I did not provide any
proof of identification to Mahalingam. He asked me to
bring it in at a later date but I never did and he never followed up. TCI is located in a
scrubby business plaza at 50 Weybright Court, near
Midland and Sheppard Aves. The Scarborough school is primarily attended by
South Asian students, many who say they know Mahalingam
— or Sivaji, as students call him — through friends
or relatives. The 39-year-old said
he got into the teaching business because he wanted to help students perform
better in school. He mentioned a gang problem within the Tamil community and
said TCI has helped troubled youth graduate high school and go on to college or
university. Mahalingam said he is a University of Ottawa-trained
engineer but began a tutoring service in 2002, which eventually became TCI. He
said he is always looking to improve his school so he enrolled in teacher’s
college at Oshawa’s University of Ontario Institute of Technology, graduating
with distinction just this year. These days at TCI,
business is booming. In the summer of 2006, its first term as a credit-granting
school, TCI had just 18 students, according to ministry inspection reports. By
the 2008-2009 school year, there were 250. Summer sessions have
fewer students and my class was small, with only nine other students in my
chemistry course. The school has four classrooms, with larger rooms partitioned
by curtains to create more teaching space. Security cameras are mounted in
classrooms, where students sit at fold-out tables under neon lights. Mahalingam is like a pied piper for slackers craving an
easy grade. Struggling students flock to TCI because they know it will be
drastically easier than their regular high schools. One of my classmates — a
recent high school graduate upgrading his chemistry mark — said he heard about
TCI from two friends who took their entire Grade 12 course load there. He said
one went on to be accepted at the University of Waterloo and the other got into
the University of Toronto. Because TCI has a
reputation for being a cakewalk, there is an expectation amongst students that
they will get their money’s worth. “Why would I pay all that money to get a 75?
Then I would just take (the course) in (public) school,” said one female
student in my class. Another classmate
bemoaned the $500-per-course price tag but said the effortless marks make TCI
worthwhile. “It’s easier, way
easier,” she said. “That’s why everybody comes here. (We) don’t even look at
the five (hundred dollar) bills.” This student confessed
she does feel guilty because her cash-strapped family has already forked over
$3,000 for six courses at TCI. Her family resorted to paying for her education
because she “screwed up” in public school, she said. But even at TCI, she
exerted minimal effort, failing all of her unit tests this summer. Her lack of
trying did not translate to a failing report card, however — this is the same
bespectacled student who ultimately scored 75 per cent in chemistry, a mark
that puts her in a competitive enough position for the university health-care
programs she’s been eyeing. She said the teacher
helped boost her mark by letting her rewrite the tests she failed, open book —
meaning, the second time around, she was allowed to consult her notes and
textbook. Mahalingam said TCI employs about 10 teachers, with
starting wages at $20 an hour. He claimed his teachers are all accredited by
the Ontario College of Teachers but would not provide a list of his staff. My Chemistry 12
teacher, Martina Rodrigues, said she only began
teaching at TCI in the last school year. But amongst students, she already has
a reputation for being one of the toughest teachers, mainly because she
emphasizes attendance and prohibits talking during class. According to the
Ontario College of Teachers’ website, Rodrigues has a
master of science from India, as well as a teaching degree and doctorate in
philosophy. She knows her material
well and appears to genuinely care about her students. But Rodrigues repeatedly reassured us she would do whatever she
could to help us get our marks up. She said she wanted everyone to “love the
subject” and would feel guilty giving poor grades to students who tried hard. “Even if a student
doesn’t deserve a mark, I’ll give it because I feel bad,” she told the class
once. “I see you guys working. But I can’t change an answer to give you a mark.
That’s cheating.” Instead, Rodrigues accommodated us in other ways. Her exam questions
were exceedingly easy. Mid-test, she added bonus questions to pump up marks or
allowed us to skip over certain questions we found too difficult. Rodrigues also gave “review” sessions an hour before
each test, revealing several questions that would be asked and giving students
time to quickly prepare for them before she handed out test papers. “Is there nuclear
fusion on the sun?” she asked once, urging everyone to find the answer in our
textbooks before we began writing our tests. That question appeared on the
test. Prior to our final
exam, Rodrigues urged us to quickly study the
differences in the structures of ammonia and water molecules. A major question
later appeared on the exam, worth several points, testing us on the differences
in the structures of ammonia and water molecules. “Oh my God, I am such
a bad teacher, giving you the questions,” Rodrigues
said, looking pained. Rodrigues explicitly assisted me on several questions
during my final exam as well. She discreetly pointed to a correct multiple
choice answer, gave me the answer to a true or false question, supplied me with
an equation I needed and checked over my calculations. I also saw her giving
step-by-step instructions to my seatmate on how to solve a long-answer problem. At the end of the
course, Rodrigues met with students individually to
discuss our marks. I had previously said to her that I hoped for at least an 80
per cent overall; she assured me she would try her best as long as I “worked my
butt off” for the final exam. During our last
meeting, Rodrigues told me I had “earned” a 72 per
cent but she would boost my grade by another 13 percentage points. “I’m going to bump it
up,” she said, urging me not to tell the other students about her favour. “I’m adding marks to this because you’ve done
well.” Rodrigues implied that she received authorization from Mahalingam to raise my grade. “That is what he is telling
me, that you and (another student in class) can get up,” she said. Repeated attempts to
reach Rodrigues after the course ended were
unsuccessful. In a follow-up
interview, Mahalingam said the reason I received 13
additional points was because I was a college-bound student who had completed a
chemistry class designed to prepare students for university. He said Rodrigues made the judgment call to grant me the extra
marks based on my “performance” and as a reward for completing a more difficult
course. According to my
classmates who have taken multiple courses at TCI, other teachers are even more
lenient than Rodrigues. One girl said a past teacher
slept during tests or left the classroom, thus allowing students to cheat
easily. Another classmate gloated about his math teacher answering entire exam
questions for him; that same teacher ended the class one week early because he
wanted to go on vacation, the student said. Mahalingam said he has faith in his staff and was
unaware of these allegations until now. “It didn’t come to my
attention,” he said. “Definitely I will take action.” In an interview with Star
reporter Robert Cribb, Education Minister Leona Dombrowsky acknowledged the need to ensure the integrity of
credits being granted by private schools. When informed of the inappropriate
grades I received at TCI, she said it “would be very troubling” for such
back-room mark inflation to occur. “It would be a very
dangerous process to employ,” Dombrowsky said. “The
concern I have (is) for those students and for the family who, in good faith,
would expect that the marks they receive would, in fact, be the marks they have
earned.” According to R.H. King
Academy teacher Jennifer Wilson, increasing numbers of students at her school
are turning to private institutions like TCI to boost their grades. The veteran
high school chemistry teacher said she was “shocked” to hear that Grade 12
chemistry credits were being granted to students who spent just 84 hours in a
classroom. Wilson said credit
mills are unfair because they take university spots or scholarships away from
more deserving students. At TCI this summer, one of my male classmates took
Chemistry 12 to hang on to an athletics scholarship
to a Toronto-area university. He said he had to upgrade his chemistry mark by
10 per cent or his university offer would be forfeited to another applicant. The student enrolled
at TCI on July 20, with just one week remaining in the course. He said the
school allowed him to waive the tests he missed,
meaning he only wrote one test and a final exam to complete the course. Mahalingam confirmed this student received his credit
but would not disclose his final mark. He said that because the student was
upgrading his chemistry mark, it was permissible for him to show up to just
half the classes. Mahalingam also claimed the student
compensated for the time he missed by coming to school in the mornings and
studying chemistry at the back of Rodrigues’
classroom while she taught a biology course. Many educators believe
the real harm of these so-called credit mills is inflicted upon the students
who attend them. They worry that young people are being sent to university
woefully unprepared and imbued with a distorted sense of their own
capabilities. At TCI, there is a
school motto listed on its flyers and website. It reads: “You are smarter than
you think!” |
உனக்கு
நாடு இல்லை என்றவனைவிட
நமக்கு நாடே இல்லை
என்றவனால்தான்
நான் எனது நாட்டை
விட்டு விரட்டப்பட்டேன்.......
ராஜினி
திரணகம MBBS(Srilanka) Phd(Liverpool,
UK) 'அதிர்ச்சி
ஏற்படுத்தும்
சாமர்த்தியம்
விடுதலைப்புலிகளின்
வலிமை மிகுந்த
ஆயுதமாகும்.’ விடுதலைப்புலிகளுடன்
நட்பு பூணுவது
என்பது வினோதமான
சுய தம்பட்டம்
அடிக்கும் விவகாரமே.
விடுதலைப்புலிகளின்
அழைப்பிற்கு உடனே
செவிமடுத்து, மாதக்கணக்கில்
அவர்களின் குழுக்களில்
இருந்து ஆலோசனை
வழங்கி, கடிதங்கள்
வரைந்து, கூட்டங்களில்
பேசித்திரிந்து,
அவர்களுக்கு அடிவருடிகளாக
இருந்தவர்கள்மீது
கூட சூசகமான எச்சரிக்கைகள்,
காலப்போக்கில்
அவர்கள்மீது சந்தேகம்
கொண்டு விடப்பட்டன.........' (முறிந்த
பனை நூலில் இருந்து) (இந்
நூலை எழுதிய ராஜினி
திரணகம விடுதலைப்
புலிகளின் புலனாய்வுப்
பிரிவின் முக்கிய
உறுப்பினரான பொஸ்கோ
என்பவரால் 21-9-1989 அன்று
யாழ் பல்கலைக்கழக
வாசலில் வைத்து
சுட்டு கொல்லப்பட்டார்) Its
capacity to shock was one of the L.T.T.E. smost potent weapons. Friendship with
the L.T.T.E. was a strange and
self-flattering affair.In the course of the coming days dire hints were dropped
for the benefit of several old friends who had for months sat on committees,
given advice, drafted latters, addressed meetings and had placed themselves at
the L.T.T.E.’s beck and call. From: Broken Palmyra வடபுலத்
தலமையின் வடஅமெரிக்க
விஜயம் (சாகரன்) புலிகளின்
முக்கிய புள்ளி
ஒருவரின் வாக்கு
மூலம் பிரபாகரனுடன் இறுதி வரை இருந்து முள்ளிவாய்கால் இறுதி சங்காரத்தில் தப்பியவரின் வாக்குமூலம் திமுக, அதிமுக, தமிழக மக்கள் இவர்களில் வெல்லப் போவது யார்? (சாகரன்) தங்கி நிற்க தனி மரம் தேவை! தோப்பு அல்ல!! (சாகரன்) (சாகரன்) வெல்லப்போவது
யார்.....? பாராளுமன்றத்
தேர்தல் 2010 (சாகரன்) பாராளுமன்றத்
தேர்தல் 2010 தேர்தல்
விஞ்ஞாபனம் - பத்மநாபா
ஈழமக்கள் புரட்சிகர
விடுதலை முன்னணி 1990
முதல் 2009 வரை அட்டைகளின்
(புலிகளின்) ஆட்சியில்...... (fpNwrpad;> ehthe;Jiw) சமரனின்
ஒரு கைதியின் வரலாறு 'ஆயுதங்கள்
மேல் காதல் கொண்ட
மனநோயாளிகள்.'
வெகு விரைவில்... மீசை
வைச்ச சிங்களவனும்
ஆசை வைச்ச தமிழனும் (சாகரன்) இலங்கையில் 'இராணுவ'
ஆட்சி வேண்டி நிற்கும்
மேற்குலகம், துணை செய்யக்
காத்திருக்கும்;
சரத் பொன்சேகா
கூட்டம் (சாகரன்) எமது தெரிவு
எவ்வாறு அமைய வேண்டும்? பத்மநாபா
ஈபிஆர்எல்எவ் ஜனாதிபதித்
தேர்தல் ஆணை இட்ட
அதிபர் 'கை', வேட்டு
வைத்த ஜெனரல்
'துப்பாக்கி' ..... யார் வெல்வார்கள்?
(சாகரன்) சம்பந்தரே!
உங்களிடம் சில
சந்தேகங்கள் (சேகர்) (m. tujuh[g;ngUkhs;) தொடரும்
60 வருடகால காட்டிக்
கொடுப்பு ஜனாதிபதித்
தேர்தலில் தமிழ்
மக்கள் பாடம் புகட்டுவார்களா? (சாகரன்) ஜனவரி இருபத்தாறு! விரும்பியோ
விரும்பாமலோ இரு
கட்சிகளுக்குள்
ஒன்றை தமிழ் பேசும்
மக்கள் தேர்ந்தெடுக்க
வேண்டும்.....? (மோகன்) 2009 விடைபெறுகின்றது!
2010 வரவேற்கின்றது!! 'ஈழத் தமிழ்
பேசும் மக்கள்
மத்தியில் பாசிசத்தின்
உதிர்வும், ஜனநாயகத்தின்
எழுச்சியும்' (சாகரன்) மகிந்த ராஜபக்ஷ
& சரத் பொன்சேகா. (யஹியா
வாஸித்) கூத்தமைப்பு
கூத்தாடிகளும்
மாற்று தமிழ் அரசியல்
தலைமைகளும்! (சதா. ஜீ.) தமிழ்
பேசும் மக்களின்
புதிய அரசியல்
தலைமை மீண்டும்
திரும்பும் 35 வருடகால
அரசியல் சுழற்சி!
தமிழ் பேசும் மக்களுக்கு
விடிவு கிட்டுமா? (சாகரன்) கப்பலோட்டிய
தமிழனும், அகதி
(கப்பல்) தமிழனும் (சாகரன்) சூரிச்
மகாநாடு (பூட்டிய)
இருட்டு அறையில்
கறுப்பு பூனையை
தேடும் முயற்சி (சாகரன்) பிரிவோம்!
சந்திப்போம்!!
மீண்டும் சந்திப்போம்!
பிரிவோம்!! (மோகன்) தமிழ்
தேசிய கூட்டமைப்புடன்
உறவு பாம்புக்கு
பால் வார்க்கும்
பழிச் செயல் (சாகரன்) இலங்கை
அரசின் முதல் கோணல்
முற்றும் கோணலாக
மாறும் அபாயம் (சாகரன்) ஈழ விடுலைப்
போராட்டமும், ஊடகத்துறை
தர்மமும் (சாகரன்) (அ.வரதராஜப்பெருமாள்) மலையகம்
தந்த பாடம் வடக்கு
கிழக்கு மக்கள்
கற்றுக்கொள்வார்களா? (சாகரன்) ஒரு பிரளயம்
கடந்து ஒரு யுகம்
முடிந்தது போல்
சம்பவங்கள் நடந்து
முடிந்துள்ளன.! (அ.வரதராஜப்பெருமாள்)
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